Mike Wheatley

Mike Wheatley is a senior staff writer at SiliconANGLE. He loves to write about Big Data and the Internet of Things, and explore how these technologies are evolving and helping businesses to become more agile. Before joining SiliconANGLE, Mike was an editor at Argophilia Travel News, an occassional contributer to The Epoch Times, and has also dabbled in SEO and social media marketing. He usually bases himself in Bangkok, Thailand, though he can often be found roaming through the jungles or chilling on a beach. Got a news story or tip? Email Mike@SiliconANGLE.com.

Latest from Mike Wheatley

Russia brings the hammer down on opposition websites

Russia has begun putting its controversial internet blacklist laws into action, blocking the websites of a number of opponents to the government of Vladimir Putin, according to reports. On Thursday, Russian ISPs were told to block access to a number of sites, including the personal website of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, and also that of ...

Ubuntu smartphones to arrive this year – but only in Spain & China

This year’s Mobile World Congress saw some positive developments for Android and Fanboi-haters, with the news that Canonical had finally found some hardware manufacturers to beging putting its Ubuntu smartphones together. Even so, little else was revealed at the time, leaving us guessing as to who might be making these devices, what kinds of specs ...

TURBINE: The NSA’s secret automated ‘mass-hacking’ program

It’s no secret that the NSA has both the method and the means to get inside your computer if it has a vested interest in doing so. The existence of its secret specialist hacking team, code-named Tailored Access Operations, was first revealed last year – the unit has all manner of sophisticated ways to hack ...

Love-hate relationship: The iPhone is a curse for telecoms carriers

When NTT Docomo, the biggest mobile operator in Japan, begun offering the iPhone to its subscribers last September, the idea was that it would stop its competitors from eating away at its market share. The plan worked, but now Docomo is struggling with a different problem resulting from this move – the iPhone is hitting ...

Dell accused of charging fees to install freeware Firefox browser

Mozilla is reported to be considering legal action against Dell, after it was revealed that the PC maker was charging customers in the UK a fee amounting to around $27 to install its free Firefox browser on new computers. Sources told The Register of Mozilla’s plans just days after it learned that Dell was demanding ...

Pew Research: By 2025 the internet will be everywhere

Just one day before the World Wide Web celebrates its 25th anniversary, the Pew Research Center has published an in-depth report on how the internet is set to evolve over the next ten years. The report, which is based on surveys of almost 1,500 web and technology experts, reveals a number of promising trends that ...

Google Idea’s Jared Cohen says cryptocurrencies are “inevitable”

In an appearance at SXSW yesterday, Google’s Director of Ideas claimed that cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin aren’t going anywhere soon. “I think it’s very obvious to all of us that cryptocurrencies are inevitable,” said Cohen in conversation with Google Chairman Eric Schmidt. “There’s lots of value to it, [but] there’s a danger to it not being ...

Why personalized news apps will never take off

Last week’s big acquisition saw CNN sell off its Zite newsreader app to Flipboard in a deal reportedly worth some $60 million, as the latter bids to become the world’s number one news personalization app. Flipboard says that it bought the app to provide “easier and better ways to discover content about the things that ...

Hackers claim MtGox still has access to ‘missing’ Bitcoin

When MtGox suddenly shut up show with $400 million worth of ‘missing’ Bitcoins last month, the owners of the exchange stated that hackers were responsible for this loss. Whoever had raided MtGox has successfully exploited the transaction malleability bug to divert these funds from the exchange, or so its owners claimed. But suspicions have lingered ...

Satoshi Nakamoto’s disappearance was good for Bitcoin

And so Satoshi Nakamoto, the man who created Bitcoin, has finally been located. That is, of course, if you believe the investigative feature published in Newsweek yesterday, which claims that “Satoshi Nakamoto” is none other than a reclusive 64-year old Japanese-American guy named Satoshi Nakamoto, living in Temple City, California. For a long time it ...